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Galeocerdo clarkensis is an extinct relative of the modern tiger shark that lived in Eocene Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana. Fossils have also been found in Mississippi. Six collections of fossils are known. [1]
The behemoth clocked in at a whopping 6 1/6 inches in length—roughly the size of a human hand!
The sharks were about 50 feet long, experts say.
The most famous fossil sites within Louisiana are Creola Bluff at Montgomery Landing Site in Grant Parish, Louisiana [20] and the Cane River Site, Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana. The Montgomery Landing Site was a 500 meters (1,600 ft) long and 14 meters (46 ft) high bluff that was the cutbank on the east side of the Red River .
The pieces are now reunited, creating a single 5.5-inch-long, 5.1-inch-wide tooth that came from one of the world’s most fearsome predators — a prehistoric shark that reached nearly 60 feet in ...
Abderospira † Abderospira leblanci † Abderospira oviformis † Abderospira stewarti † Abdounia † Abdounia enniskilleni Abra † Abra nitens Shell of an Acanthocardia cockle Acanthocardia † Acanthocardia tuomeyi † Aciculiscala † Aciculiscala jacobi Acirsa † Acirsa whitneyi Aclis – report made of unidentified related form or using admittedly obsolete nomenclature † Aclis ...
Galeocerdo alabamensis is an extinct relative of the modern tiger shark. Nomenclature of this shark has been debated, and recent literature identified it more closely with the Physogaleus genus of prehistoric shark, rather than Galeocerdo. The classification of Physogaleus is known as tiger-like sharks while Galeocerdo refers to
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